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Given that signs and meanings pervade the world in its different aspects, semiotics is naturally open to interactions with other fields, from the humanities and social sciences to the natural and pure sciences. Open Semiotics aims to explore and expand these interactions, and to facilitate new avenues for interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary research, providing insights into a redeployment of disciplinary fields. Such an endeavor, which is intended to benefit the entire scientific community, has drawn upon extensive cooperation. This has resulted in 141 chapters authored by 178 scholars from 58 countries spanning all continents, which represent a broad array of trends and approaches as well as numerous and diverse disciplinary crossings. Open Semiotics comprises four volumes: (1) Epistemological and Conceptual Foundations, (2) Culture and Society, (3) Texts, Images, Arts, (4) Life and its Extensions. This book is the second volume of the project.
Given that signs and meanings pervade the world in its different aspects, semiotics is naturally open to interactions with other fields, from the humanities and social sciences to the natural and pure sciences. Open Semiotics aims to explore and expand these interactions, and to facilitate new avenues for interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary research, providing insights into a redeployment of disciplinary fields. Such an endeavor, which is intended to benefit the entire scientific community, has drawn upon extensive cooperation. This has resulted in 141 chapters authored by 178 scholars from 58 countries spanning all continents, which represent a broad array of trends and approaches as well as numerous and diverse disciplinary crossings. Open Semiotics comprises four volumes: (1) Epistemological and Conceptual Foundations, (2) Culture and Society, (3) Texts, Images, Arts, (4) Life and its Extensions. This book is the third volume of the project.
Depuis l’année académique 2009-2010, École Normale Supérieure de l’Université de Maroua met à la disposition des départements un fonds d’appui à la recherche destiné à encourager et à soutenir les efforts de chercheurs de toutes les disciplines. Les contributions qui paraissent dans ce premier numéro des Cahiers du DELFLEF sont des analyses littéraires, linguistiques, culturelles ou plus spécifiquement didactiques qui aideront nos étudiants et autres chercheurs à mieux appréhender la notion d’hybridation et les phénomènes qui lui sont connexes dans le contexte camerounais. Les Cahiers se proposent d’être la vitrine de la vie scientifique du département de langue française et littératures d’expression française.
"En proposant de réfléchir sur des modes d'articulation, des modalités de désarticulations et des conditions de possibles réarticulations, l'ouvrage jette un double regard sur les objets d'étude en question et les différentes théories des sciences du langage : comment ces objets d'étude sont-ils composés (la construction étant un jeu de déconstruction et de reconstruction) et comment les théories des sciences du langage (dans un dialogue scientifique) s'interpénètrent-elles et pénètrent-elles leurs objets ?" Ouvrage scientifique portant sur les sciences du langage enseignées par Louis Millogo à Ouagadougou, les différents travaux menés par ses anciens étudiants proposent une réflexion autour de la culture africaine et son rapport à l'expression, écrite ou orale. Littérature, cinéma, théâtre, musique, différents domaines de l'art sont abordés et mis en relation avec le langage pour mettre en valeur la richesse et la diversité de cette culture. Ces recherches soulignent les particularités des sociétés africaines et les rapports qu'elles entretiennent entre elles comme autant de désarticulations et réarticulations du langage."--Page 4 of cover.
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This book showcases current research on language in new media, the performing arts and music in Africa, emphasising the role that youth play in language change and development. The authors demonstrate how the efforts of young people to throw off old colonial languages and create new local ones has become a site of language creativity. Analysing the language of ‘new media’, including social media, print media and new media technologies, and of creative arts such as performance poetry, hip-hop and rap, they use empirical research from such diverse countries as Cameroon, Nigeria, Kenya, the Ivory Coast and South Africa. This original edited collection will appeal to students and scholars of African sociolinguistics, particularly in the light of the rapidly changing globalized context in which we live.